The Day a Master Potter Burned a Fortune Rather Than Betray a Dead Artist’s Name

Chapter 1: The Vase That Should Not Exist

“They’ll sell it.”

The whisper floated across the workshop before dawn, low enough to avoid accusation, loud enough to be heard.

Joseph Hall continued sanding the base of the Celadon vase as though he hadn’t heard anything. Dust gathered on his fingers. Behind him, furnaces breathed heat into the ancient bronze bell foundry, their orange glow flickering across rows of towering clay molds that looked like sleeping giants.

“They have to sell it,” another worker murmured. “Look at the roof. Look at the accounts.”

Patrick Young stood near the loading doors pretending to organize crates. He wasn’t pretending very well.

Joseph set down the polishing cloth.

The vase sat in front of him on a wooden stand.

Even unfinished, it seemed impossible.

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